Data Applications
VALIDATION OF THE NORTH AMERICAN
LAND DATA ASSIMILATION SYSTEM (NLDAS) USING DATA FROM OKLAHOMA
MESONET OASIS SITES
A team of federal agencies and universities which includes
the NCEP Environmental Modeling Center, NASA Goddard Space
Flight Center (GSFC), NWS/OHD, NESDIS/ORA, Princeton University,
Rutgers University, the University of Washington, University
of Maryland, and the University of Oklahoma is developing
a Land Data Assimilation System (LDAS) for use at both North
American (NLDAS) and global scales (GLDAS). The NLDAS
infrastructure consists of uncoupled land surface models
forced with precipitation observations, output from the Eta
model data assimilation system (EDAS), solar radiation from
the GOES satellites, and radar precipitation estimates.
It is being developed to initialize and improve the simulation
of land surface states and energy fluxes in coupled and uncoupled
land model components of numerical forecast models. The
NLDAS system is expected to reduce forecast errors by providing
better initial condition for the land surface component in
NWP and climate models.
Retrospective simulation data sets for the Mosaic and Noah
land surface models (LSMs) were provided in collaboration
with NLDAS Group for the 1999-2000 period. The model
simulated energy fluxes were compared with the OASIS surface
flux data set, which includes net radiation, downwelling
shortwave radiation, upwelling shortwave radiation, downwelling
longwave radiation, upwelling longwave radiation, latent
heat flux, sensible heat flux, ground heat flux, and skin
temperature for the following days: 23 May 2000, 29 May 2000,
30 May 2000, 10 July 2000, 13 August 2000, 14 August 2000,
25 August 2000, 29 August 2000. The time-averaged hourly
model output is being compared to the hourly averaged flux
observations at each OASIS Super Site.
Mosaic vs. OASIS:
The components of the surface energy balance for Mosaic
and all OASIS Super Sites are plotted in Figure
1. Overall,
the net radiation results indicate good agreement between
the Mosaic model and the OASIS observations. The latent
heat flux comparison reveals differences between the Mosaic
model and the observations, with Mosaic producing larger
flux values than those measured. Sensible heat fluxes
compared less favorably. Significant differences were
found between the Mosaic model and observed values. Finally,
the ground heat flux results indicate a strong bias. The
Mosaic land surface model consistently overestimated ground
heat flux compared to the observed values.
Noah vs. OASIS
The results of the comparison between Noah and OASIS fluxes
are shown in Figure
2. Overall, the preliminary analyses
show good agreement between the observed and modeled values
of net radiation and are consistent throughout the data set
for each Super Site. In terms of a regional approach,
these preliminary results show that net radiation is captured
very well, sensible heat flux is overestimated, latent heat
flux is underestimated, and ground heat flux was slightly
overestimated.
The
preliminary validation of the Noah and Mosaic modeled surface
energy fluxes using OASIS data provides a blueprint for future
work. Further investigations of additional
candidate days and closer inspection of individual sites
will allow for a more complete validation effort. In
turn, model performance will be improved. For more information on the NLDAS Project, visit http://ldas.gsfc.nasa.gov. |